Guest guest Posted December 17, 2002 Report Share Posted December 17, 2002 Mama, please turn back on the music. I need input.†Awwww! I LOVE that!! That is so cool! I am working on getting mine to realize his own needs too, and once this week when the dogs were barking he ran to me and said "Please, please, I need my quiet ears!" (he wears Bob the Builder style industrial earmuffs to ease his sensitivities to noise) I bet you were ear grinning just like me when you heard that:) Tommi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2002 Report Share Posted December 17, 2002 Wow, baby crying! I found with my 6 yo verball stims when he needs auditory input. This can be extremely distracting and unsettling especially when I am driving the car when he is doing it. I turn on the stereo to some music he likes. I first discovered this out of desperation of trying to drown him out. Amazingly, he stopped his sounds. Sometimes he does sing along which is preferable to what he WAS doing. If I turn off the music, he says, “Mama, please turn back on the music. I need input.” Another thought. There are times that this doesn’t always work. I would say that 80% of the time it is effective. Saved my sanity. Bec Re: Barking My son's annoying verbal stim of the moment is all too realistic baby crying, picked up from a new friend's baby, I swear, he sounds just like her! He's 6 and autie, and I have never found any ways to end any of his verbal stims, but I have been successful in limited where he can do them. At home he must do them in his room, and only in his room. When it starts I watch for a minute to see if it's fleeting or if it's gonna be a nice long ear paining session, and if so I steer him to his room and say " If you need to cry baby cry this is where you do it, when you are done, you may come out " He gets this now because we have been doing this exact same thing for years, but at first it took a lot of him bouncing right back out still stimming. In public he carries around these Yu-Gi-Oh cards which he clenches on to for dear life, and if the stim starts I first warn him the cards are going to be taken away if he will not stop and hum instead (an acceptable verbal stim I can live with) and now that's all it takes to get it to stop, but I used to have to actually act on my threat and be a big meanie until he got the connection. Thankfully, it didn't really take that long. Not sure if any of this rambling helped...lol, but that's how I handle things like this:) Tommi To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: autism-aspergers-unsubscribeegroups Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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